Komentáře •

  • @jaxson3887
    @jaxson3887 Před 2 lety +153

    I was 18 in 1999. I went by my local arcade and offered 350$ for the MK2 I grew up playing on. I’m 41 now and still have it, favorite game of all time.

  • @Norweeg
    @Norweeg Před 2 lety +255

    When MKII hit arcades, it was an exciting time. And when it hit home consoles, that’s the only game I can remember playing with friends for months.

    • @thepolacek
      @thepolacek Před 2 lety +13

      I totally agree. I was a snes gamer. Words cannot describe how disappointed I was when I played it on my buddy's genesis... maybe it was just the sound. My memory is a little fuzzy.
      The release of MKII was definitely near the end of the arcade era.

    • @GrayifiedX
      @GrayifiedX Před 2 lety +12

      Got an SNES just so i could play MK II

    • @hicknopunk
      @hicknopunk Před 2 lety +17

      Street Fighter 2 was insane to get back then. It was such a good game, such a good port. Street Fighter 2: Turbo is literally my favorite fighter next to Killer Instinct.

    • @JohnDoe-wq5eu
      @JohnDoe-wq5eu Před 2 lety +6

      @@thepolacek
      Yup,I didn't realize until looking back on a trip I took to Disneyland back in 95. That was the last gasp for arcades as I knew them. I also got to stop at Santa Cruz Beach boardwalk and again I guarantee the arcade scene is nothing like it was then.
      It's weird to think about now but that truly was the end of the era.

    • @BobbyHo2022
      @BobbyHo2022 Před 2 lety +6

      Yep. It was pretty amazing. Mk3 on the other hand was a let down to me.

  • @KanoWhite53
    @KanoWhite53 Před 2 lety +29

    Man... the days when you could play MK or NBA Jam in the arcades and they were new games.... amazing times.

    • @AngryCalvin
      @AngryCalvin Před 2 lety +2

      Yeah, I spent a lot of time in arcades in the 80’s during the golden age. I knew the 90s were going to be special as soon as I saw Pit-Fighter for the first time. You can laugh at that one but it didn’t take long for Street Fighter II and Mortal Kombat to come along. King of Fighters became my favorite but I still remember seeing Fatal Fury for the first time and being blown away. We had some really good choices and to be able to get some of these games for really cheap is just really cool.

  • @charliep5139
    @charliep5139 Před 2 lety +22

    One of my fondest memories is driving around to all the video game rental stores the weekend mk2 came out and all the copies were out. Sad and frustrated after going to like the third or fourth one my dad just said, “do you want to go to Best Buy and just try and buy it?” I couldn’t believe my ears. We went and they unbelievably had a copy. I was nine and it was the first game I ever bought without renting it first. I still have it to this day! Love ya, dad!

    • @FreeOpenTruth
      @FreeOpenTruth Před rokem +3

      An awesome dad move!!! 👍

    • @edotsuki1979
      @edotsuki1979 Před 4 měsíci

      magical your father you might had to cut getting a pizza that week or boil some weinies for hotdogs just as long you had sodapop some people wait a life time for a moment like this

  • @Coldcasereview
    @Coldcasereview Před 2 lety +81

    The early 90's was a great time to be into arcades. Have such sweet memories of playing 2 player double dragon, we also had a lot of weird street fighter 2 hacks/clones around that time

    • @thehound1359
      @thehound1359 Před 2 lety +7

      Yup. I remember spending most of my time playing golden axe, double dragon, rabbit punch, ninja gaiden and rampage. Was such an awesome place to spend a Saturday afternoon.

    • @kri249
      @kri249 Před 2 lety +6

      Those were the golden years.

    • @djstyles97
      @djstyles97 Před 2 lety +1

      Always found it funny how a lot of those hacked SF2 moves became official moves in the later games. I even remember seeing World Warrior hacks where you could pick the bosses BEFORE Champion Edition was released.

  • @TheDumontShow
    @TheDumontShow Před 2 lety +161

    Sega Lord X, I just wanted to say thank you for the years of entertainment you brought to the retro gaming community. I never missed an episode of your series. And of course, this episode is excellent as well. One love brother

    • @almacamc9152
      @almacamc9152 Před 2 lety +4

      Thank you, I always do my best providing the best content I can find for my post..FACTS

    • @stoomkracht
      @stoomkracht Před 2 lety +3

      @@almacamc9152 and you are?

    • @donkeyparadise9276
      @donkeyparadise9276 Před 2 lety

      say no to the great reset

    • @TheDumontShow
      @TheDumontShow Před 2 lety +1

      @@stoomkracht I was wondering how he was.

  • @bit-ishbulldog2089
    @bit-ishbulldog2089 Před 2 lety +6

    I left high school in 1993.. 45 this year. Been a SEGA fan for about 40 year's.

  • @HeyHedgehog
    @HeyHedgehog Před 2 lety +42

    I actually have and super enjoyed this version as a kid. I didn’t have MK2 for either the SNES or Genesis, and never played it much at the arcade though. I had a 32X though, received this game as a gift, and well- Yeah, it was a great time for me. Still fond of the game today, even the 32X version.

  • @miltonbates6425
    @miltonbates6425 Před 2 lety +88

    I actually really liked the 32X port of MKII. The control is closer to the arcade than any other port, imo. If only it wasnt so rushed...it could've been great.

    • @deshawnheaggans6810
      @deshawnheaggans6810 Před 2 lety +11

      You basically just repeated what he said.😒

    • @EliteGamersUnited
      @EliteGamersUnited Před 2 lety +5

      its a shame this version is far superior in most ways to the Saturn version, cept graphics

    • @EliteGamersUnited
      @EliteGamersUnited Před 2 lety +9

      if the Saturn version wasnt a half assed hack job it could have been the penultimate version

    • @transitionalspecies4365
      @transitionalspecies4365 Před 2 lety +1

      @@EliteGamersUnited penultimate means next to last.

    • @EliteGamersUnited
      @EliteGamersUnited Před 2 lety

      @@transitionalspecies4365 NOT IN MY VOCAB IT DONT. I LIKE USING IT AS THE PRIMA GALACTA (tm, all rights reserved, copyright, pat pending) 🙃😁

  • @deku812
    @deku812 Před 2 lety +12

    Your videos where you go into a bit of backstory setting the 'scene' like your story about waiting in the arcades for MK2 and you and your friends playing the heck out of it and establishing why the home ports were a big deal is such a refreshing thing to see in videos on these topics! I love it. You're recording/preserving a piece of gaming history, your history and providing context to these old games that young kids today may not understand was a big deal back then!

  • @mrsettles216
    @mrsettles216 Před 2 lety +2

    So much nostalgia… you just made me 13 again bro. I think I had every port of this from Sega … Genesis, 32X, and Saturn

  • @markjohnson8191
    @markjohnson8191 Před 2 lety +13

    I bought MK II 32X back in the day when Circuit City was closing out all of their Genesis and 32X games. It was $20 and for me it seemed worth it. I also bought Revolution X for the Genesis for the same price at the same time. At least one game had value. Love your videos and appreciate your hard work. Take care.

  • @jediknightgeo
    @jediknightgeo Před 2 lety +27

    I absolutely LOVED this port. I put so many damn hours into the 32X version back then it was insane. It was never going to be arcade perfect, or super close to it, but it was great overall.

    • @thankfulgamer2405
      @thankfulgamer2405 Před 2 lety +2

      The snes port was the best

    • @drunkensailor112
      @drunkensailor112 Před rokem +2

      @@thankfulgamer2405 no

    • @thankfulgamer2405
      @thankfulgamer2405 Před rokem

      @@drunkensailor112 actually it was. Not a fan boii what so ever.. Just sharing facts

    • @drunkensailor112
      @drunkensailor112 Před rokem +3

      @@thankfulgamer2405 no. It's not a fact. It's your opinion

    • @thankfulgamer2405
      @thankfulgamer2405 Před rokem

      @@drunkensailor112 no it's not my opinion it's fact. Maybe check out some comparison vids? Sound, contrast, pixels, frames etc. I'm not making this up.

  • @WarlockX4
    @WarlockX4 Před 2 lety +27

    I immediately bought this game when it was released. It was cleaner, ran smoother and the six button Genesis controller was perfect for this game.

    • @marccaselle8108
      @marccaselle8108 Před 2 lety +4

      I wish mk 2 was released on Sega CD instead of MK 1.

  • @Supperdude9
    @Supperdude9 Před 2 lety +2

    The sound and the crispness of the SNES made me proud to be a Nintendo guy even back then. Anybody was able to know the difference the sound was for both systems.

  • @Futuredynamo
    @Futuredynamo Před 2 lety +11

    I was lucky enough back in the day to have the SNES and the Genesis with Sega CD & 32X add ons (and I still have them). When the SNES and Genesis versions of this game came out, I opted for the SNES version since it didn't have the blood/violence compromises that the first game did on the system, and in terms of graphics and sound, it would clearly be the superior of the two versions.
    When the game came out for 32X, I was excited to get it and try it out, hoping it would be closer to the arcade. It does have some advantages, as explained here in the video. I was let down though by the backgrounds being processed through the Genesis. That really stands out (in a bad way) against the characters and grahics that are actually processed through the 32X. I still played it a lot, and I didn't hate it, but I was let down.
    I can understand you preferring the 32X version over the SNES, and for me there are definately trade-offs, but ultimately out of the two of them, I think I prefer the SNES version more, mostly because it is a more even, consistent presentation overall, where as the 32X version has elemements processed through lesser 16 bit hardware against elements processed through 32 bit hardware, and the presentation just feels more "slapped together."
    Regarding the SNES and Genesis versions of MK1 and MK2, it became sort of a joke between and friend and me back in the day that for whatever reason, the superior version of each game (Genesis in the case of MK1, and SNES for MK2) always had the inaccuracy of having the character named outside of the energy bars, instead inside them like in the arcade. As if (in terms of the joke, since it's clearly not the real reason), in order for it to be the overall superior version of the game, that one aspect HAS to be inaccurate to the arcade for some reason.

  • @RichardCraig
    @RichardCraig Před 2 lety +14

    I had this back in the day, and my 32X started to develop issues, specifically in this game the announcer would just randomly keep saying "Baraka!" all throughout the fight. It also caused characters in VF to randomly rotate 90 degrees with their legs straight out in front of them at random, weirdest hardware glitch I ever saw.

  • @santonnwilson1058
    @santonnwilson1058 Před 2 lety +25

    I was and still am a Sega fan, but back then, I saw this game for SNES, and I remember fantasizing about owning this game. There wasn't anything as close to the arcade as the SNES version. Later, I played the MS DOS version. The sound was a bit better, but that was it until the Arcade Treasures version was released many years later.

    • @theungreatkahli
      @theungreatkahli Před 2 lety +4

      Yeah I remember taking off school to go get it. Couldn’t wait to play MK 2 at home

    • @RealHomeRecording
      @RealHomeRecording Před 2 lety +1

      Sega Saturn had a great port... except load times.

    • @santonnwilson1058
      @santonnwilson1058 Před 2 lety +1

      @Sometimes Igoback I remember that too. Fo sho. I did not like that sweat back then. 😒

  • @jeffm5056
    @jeffm5056 Před 2 lety +2

    The mid 90's were the best time to be a gamer. I remember pre-purchasing games like MK 2, NBA Jam and MK 3. Because if you didn't, you didn't get that game for a while. Gamers today don't know what it was like when games used to sell out. I remember not getting copies of Super Mario 2 or 3 for months because all of the toy stores had sold out. As I got older in the 90's, I had part time jobs that allowed me to put money down to guarantee I would get a copy on launch day. I really miss those days.

    • @legros731
      @legros731 Před 2 lety +1

      Now they have the game but no console to buy even 2 year after the initial release

  • @TheHobbsTV
    @TheHobbsTV Před 2 lety +5

    Great video as always SLX!!!! It's funny because all I wanted back then was the arcade machine in my living room and nothing could take the place of that. I was fortunate enough to enjoy every single version of the MKs including this one and I had a great time with it back then. The 32x and SNES versions were my favorites (outside the arcade of course). Today I do have all 5 games in original cabinets fully restored with new old stock CRTs and they are appreciated by me everyday!

  • @BlackMoore82
    @BlackMoore82 Před 2 lety +17

    The 12 year old me in '94 definitely noticed the sound difference back then, as for the latter I didn't care. The 32X port of MKII remains my favorite over the Genesis and SNES ones.

    • @Kapojos
      @Kapojos Před 2 lety +7

      The snes port is still clearly the best version from that time period!!!!!!!

    • @ajsingh4545
      @ajsingh4545 Před 2 lety +7

      @@Kapojos no it isn't. Muffled and tinny music with lot of missing instruments, muffled speech and runs in lower resolution leading to loss of fine detail

    • @cobrakainevereverdies6940
      @cobrakainevereverdies6940 Před 2 lety +2

      @@ajsingh4545 - REALLY ?????????? Even the creators of the game said it's the CLOSEST to the Arcade bar none. But you're under 35 so I won't argue you.

    • @cobrakainevereverdies6940
      @cobrakainevereverdies6940 Před 2 lety +1

      @@Kapojos - Do you know how to do combo fatalities ??

    • @ajsingh4545
      @ajsingh4545 Před 2 lety

      @@cobrakainevereverdies6940 ok boomer

  • @Y9Power
    @Y9Power Před 2 lety +6

    Gosh I miss the 1990s!

  • @riverstyx928
    @riverstyx928 Před 2 lety +2

    Damn man, how the time flies. Now we're waiting for MK 12.

  • @PistNRods
    @PistNRods Před 2 lety +6

    If they increased the fighter sprite sizes, it would have gone a long way in how it was received. That would easily get most to ignore the backgrounds and colors.

    • @zeus1117
      @zeus1117 Před rokem

      Yes but there were hardware limitations that dictate the sizes and the amount of animations per move

    • @PistNRods
      @PistNRods Před rokem

      @@zeus1117 the 32x hardware could have done it, I bet if it was a 40 meg cartridge like SSF2 they could have fit larger sprites. 32x MK2 is 32 meg. But I can’t blame them, expensive cart for very few people to buy. Business decision.

  • @joemomsmith1889
    @joemomsmith1889 Před 2 lety +7

    I can't believe the 32x did not fix the Genesis problems like the animations of Johnny Cage which was my favorite character itdon't even have his finishing pose.

  • @kaosdash
    @kaosdash Před 2 lety +5

    Arcade > SNES > 32x > MD

  • @joellanderson5137
    @joellanderson5137 Před 2 lety +1

    My local Round Table had a small arcade room, remember playing this every weekend. The RT pizza smell always reminds me of this time.

  • @LordScottrick
    @LordScottrick Před 2 lety

    That intro speaks to me. I would have been 8 or 9 when MKII came out in arcades, but man, I spent so much time playing it during the summer in arcades down the shore in South Jersey.

  • @joncbartlett
    @joncbartlett Před 2 lety +24

    I remember saving the $54 it cost to get the Sega version months ahead. I don’t think I have anticipated a release so fanatically in my life, and I remember the utter disappointment I felt experiencing the port for all the reasons given here (in the way only a 10 year old can). I also hated that the bones and guts would disappear during a fatality. Just so underwhelming after the arcade. I used to rent a Super Nintendo from the video store just so I could play that version. I had picked a side in the console wars and I hated that the “enemy” had the better version of my favorite game.

    • @ganjagun0025
      @ganjagun0025 Před 2 lety

      Yeah I picked a side as well. But don't forget that Sega had the blood code for MK 1. That was thrown in my face all the time. The SNES had green blood.... green blood.

    • @joncbartlett
      @joncbartlett Před 2 lety +1

      @@ganjagun0025 Yeah, Nintendo really dropped the ball with the first one, but they more than redeemed themselves on MK2.

    • @ganjagun0025
      @ganjagun0025 Před 2 lety

      @@joncbartlett Yeah they really had a point to prove because a lot of people went out and bought Genesis specifically for that reason. But I always assumed the 32x was an arcade perfect port. Seeing that it was more powerful. Boy was I wrong.

    • @brandonginsburg3120
      @brandonginsburg3120 Před 2 lety

      @@ganjagun0025 Not even that; it was sweat.

  • @kaox44
    @kaox44 Před 2 lety +5

    The SNES version was almost perfect, even rival that of the 32bit system.

    • @wizzgamer
      @wizzgamer Před 2 lety +1

      The SNES version was actually better than all 32-bit systems the 32x still had missing animation and sound and the cd console ports where a mess.

    • @hitek9too255
      @hitek9too255 Před 2 lety

      @@wizzgamer Not it wasn't. The SNES version was more washed out, more goofier, had missing animations and screams, wasn't as dark and had a worser control scherme. The 32x was by far the best home port version.

    • @Ehrle6969
      @Ehrle6969 Před 2 lety +1

      @@hitek9too255 snes was better ask all LOl genesis x32 r worst

    • @MEGAD-nb9uu
      @MEGAD-nb9uu Před rokem

      ​@@hitek9too255na the sega ones were a joke 💩 pure shit

  • @Oysterblade84
    @Oysterblade84 Před 2 lety +1

    You brought up a good point about the cost of the game at retail in North America at $69.95. Unfortunately the only way around this was by renting the games out at blockbuster video back then and deciding for yourself if it was worth owning or not. But how many of us actually had the chance to rent a 32X game back in the day? And how many of us actually came across a video rental store that actually stocked 32X games? With that said, I really do think Matt Furniss's score is better than the Arcade originals. Those drums are beastly! The SNES version's audio was yet another game on that system where the audio sounded like it was coming out of a galvanized tin shed.

  • @FreneticZetetic
    @FreneticZetetic Před 2 lety +1

    I remember this golden era very well! The Genesis version of MKII was always rented out when I'd go, but I eventually got my copy! Great review as always.

  • @aaronreid8375
    @aaronreid8375 Před 2 lety +5

    The arcade version has the cheapest AI, the code literally reads the player's control inputs and reacts. The only way to really get far is to bait the AI into attacking and counter. Much better as a 2-player game, and the cabinet is a beast. I swear I'm going to need a chainsaw to get it out of my basement.

    • @zanegandini5350
      @zanegandini5350 Před 2 lety +2

      Not only did the AI input read, but it could flat out do things a human couldn't. If you slow it down, you can see it ignoring attacks that should have connected.

    • @mikeg2491
      @mikeg2491 Před 2 lety

      @@zanegandini5350 it sucks because it’s frankly just not fun to play single player nowadays. At least Street Fighter you can crank the difficulty to one star and just casually whip the cpu as a time waster.

    • @jerelminter
      @jerelminter Před rokem +1

      @@zanegandini5350 Yes, if you do a rising uppercut, and slow down the footage you can clearly see that the CPU is cheating. They blatantly ignore your uppercut, and do theirs instantly even though you already swung at them first so that shouldn't have happened. It's bullshit.

    • @zanegandini5350
      @zanegandini5350 Před rokem

      @@jerelminter Yeah and I'm fairly certain the Genesis port also does this. The SNES and 32x ports are more forgiving, leading me to believe they don't cheat as much.

  • @WickedGamerCollector
    @WickedGamerCollector Před 2 lety +4

    Really enjoyed this video, did not know about some details. 😁👍

  • @Canadian_Gamer
    @Canadian_Gamer Před 2 lety +1

    I like how you always post your videos in the afternoon and at night.

  • @meatwax
    @meatwax Před rokem

    The memories of playing team kombat in MK2 on snes...getting high, w homies and cousins. And just gettin crazy is some of my best 90s memories

  • @tra0459
    @tra0459 Před 2 lety +4

    Best version. Just wish the music was better. Appreciated the added voice samples and tight controls

  • @nicolaspersijn
    @nicolaspersijn Před 2 lety +3

    I was an absolute MKII god in the arcades with my Milena corner combos.

    • @legros731
      @legros731 Před 2 lety

      So you where one of those guy who played all night with one quarter nice

  • @MatCaveGaming
    @MatCaveGaming Před 2 lety +2

    I still play the 32X version of MK2. You’re totally right about wondering what the 32X truly was capable of. Great video!

  • @greensun1334
    @greensun1334 Před 2 lety +2

    Yesterday I made a "Mortal Kombat 2 day". Played the original and the ports (SNES, 32X, PS1 and Megadrive), all with the same controller (Nacon GC-100, it's nothing special but absolute worth its money) and the same button layout on my PC. My conclusion: SNES is the best, atmosphere is perfect, it's very complete with all the music, the fatalities look the best, many of the SFX and samples are included, the gameplay is also the most faithful to the arcade and it has the arcade ending/outro, 32X is just like an improvement hack of the Megadrive port, the added sounds are in different quality and to loud and obviours (I would have been felt so scammed If I bought it back then because they could have made it better with its 32megs cartridge size it has on a 32bit system) but I like the accurate lifebars, the 3D "Fight" and "Finish Him/Her" letters and the intro pictures, the outro is still missing, PS1 looks the best but otherwhise it sucks because of loading times during gameplay and wrong placed music & missing samples/SFX; Shang Tsung is also useless, Megadrive's gameplay feels almost like a different game, many missing animation frames - same with 32X, wrong music and ugly colors, so much missing content.

  • @justinvermilyea9192
    @justinvermilyea9192 Před 2 lety +3

    One of the few 32x games that actually lived up to its performance capabilities

  • @stevesteve0521
    @stevesteve0521 Před 2 lety +5

    I still think the snes port was the best home port of mk2 at the time. Didn’t need to deal with dumb load times like the Saturn and ps1 ports with a bunch of sounds effects removed, didn’t have to deal with bad colors and mediocre music like the genesis port, the 32x port has the same exact mediocre music and it still didn’t look as good graphically in my opinion as the snes. Snes not only looked and played fantastic but it had an exclusive 4 on 4 vs endurance mode and a hidden intro with kintaro stomping on the acclaim logo.

  • @TeinMustang
    @TeinMustang Před 2 lety

    I still remember the 32X version of MKII fondly. IIRC I received it for Christmas in '94 and I was very impressed. I had not played the Genesis or SNES ports previously, so I didn't really have any other home version to compare it to.

  • @kevinburrell3359
    @kevinburrell3359 Před 2 lety +1

    I miss being a kid. Not a care in the world. I had some stress as a child but it was still care free..swore I was old when I turned 20

  • @GYTCommnts
    @GYTCommnts Před 2 lety +3

    MKII is one of the best fighting games ever, and one of the highlights of the series. I return to it in different versions, ports and hacks from time to time. The first time with my friends we reached Kintaro and later Shao Kahn was amazing. We celebrated as winning a world cup. 🤣

  • @maximillionroivas3893
    @maximillionroivas3893 Před 2 lety +4

    Growing up, I was a huge MK fan. I bought all versions of MKII, and still have them all today. The 32X version was my last version to get, and I like it alot better than the Saturn version. But the Super NES version will always be my personal favorite of the ports.

    • @johnjames7332
      @johnjames7332 Před 2 lety

      Funnily enough i like the saturn version the most

    • @maximillionroivas3893
      @maximillionroivas3893 Před 2 lety

      @@johnjames7332 The Saturn version has the best graphics and sound but the damn loading kills it for me. It's a good port, but I wished the loading was addressed a bit better. But I suppose it's a mid 90s CD-ROM game so....

    • @iamstartower
      @iamstartower Před 2 lety

      @@maximillionroivas3893 loading for fatallities and transformations were bad and dissapointing as a kid... as an adult are more bearable and adds to de nostalgia.

    • @maximillionroivas3893
      @maximillionroivas3893 Před 2 lety +1

      @@iamstartower To each their own, I suppose. Hated the load times then, still hate them now, lol.

  • @Michael-xn9mz
    @Michael-xn9mz Před 2 lety +1

    The 32x is like a mysterious woman I always wanted to talk to and learn about but never was able to get in the same room as

  • @Michael-xn9mz
    @Michael-xn9mz Před 2 lety

    This is actually a great video it's so cool to not only see the 32x version next to not only genesis but snes but even the arcade

  • @Bloodreign1
    @Bloodreign1 Před 2 lety +3

    Like the Genesis port, Scorpion and Sub Zero can cheese the hell out of Kintaro. Once you catch him with a spear or freeze and uppercut, immediately pull out another spear or freeze, and you will catch him as he gets up, setting him up for yet another uppercut, then spear or freeze again, uppercut, etc. He can be double flawlessed this way. This trick only works in the Genesis and 32X ports, no other version as he blocks as he gets up.

    • @RetroGamesBoy78
      @RetroGamesBoy78 Před 2 lety

      lol. you should check out the speed runs of Mk2 arcade.

    • @Gatorade69
      @Gatorade69 Před 2 lety

      @@RetroGamesBoy78 Is the arcade speedrun just to see in how little time the computer can win ?
      MK2 for the arcade was cheap as hell.

    • @RetroGamesBoy78
      @RetroGamesBoy78 Před 2 lety

      @@Gatorade69
      I think its something like 6 mins completion time, mainly using punch. Like I said, see it for yourself!

  • @laughingseal2282
    @laughingseal2282 Před 2 lety +7

    The best port of mk2.

    • @thecunninlynguist
      @thecunninlynguist Před 2 lety +2

      super nintendo, I agree.

    • @chrisr529
      @chrisr529 Před 2 lety

      @@thecunninlynguist got im'

    • @maroon9273
      @maroon9273 Před 2 lety

      Until the midway treasure, arcade collection and ps3 version home ports alongside the dos cd/disc versions.

    • @laughingseal2282
      @laughingseal2282 Před 2 lety

      @@maroon9273 These aren't ports, they are emulated versions. And both have input delay and speed issues.

    • @maroon9273
      @maroon9273 Před 2 lety

      @@laughingseal2282 same thing with the early arcade versions. No game is perfect but at least it still plays well.

  • @mstewart248
    @mstewart248 Před 2 lety +1

    I had a Genesis and I bought a Super Nintendo for this port back in the day. There was arcade cab at a laundromat next to my house that I use to play every day before it came out on console. When the console versions came out I was so accustomed to the arcade version I couldn’t take the cutbacks on the Genesis. The Super Nintendo version was pretty damn close to the arcade.

  • @peterchaseify
    @peterchaseify Před 2 lety +1

    I don't recall ever believing I could get an arcade perfect port on a home console...since nothing I played at home looked/sounded like the arcade games I played at the time. For MKII, as a Genesis owner, I didn't mind the vocal tracks being missing and came to enjoy the eerie sound effect they used in place of the announcer saying "Fatality" with the blood drip.

  • @johnjames7332
    @johnjames7332 Před 2 lety +3

    I had it on the SNES and was so happy!!….until I saw my friends pc running MK2 with Soundblaster and Roland audio. It was immediately clear that the PC version was head and shoulders above everything else

    • @SomeOrangeCat
      @SomeOrangeCat Před 2 lety

      Yeah PCs were really on the rise then.

    • @Kaido_928
      @Kaido_928 Před 2 lety +2

      PC version is best in gfx, sound and no cd loas time. PC version only had shtty controls. And 2 player on a keyboard did not work, cause all the keys lock up when u keep a certain amount of keys pressed.
      And at that time there were no proper pc compatible joypads.

    • @AngryCalvin
      @AngryCalvin Před 2 lety

      Yeah Gravis game pads were quite clumsy. I use real arcade sticks now and realize they play a ton better just because these games were designed for those controllers.

    • @SomeOrangeCat
      @SomeOrangeCat Před 2 lety

      @@AngryCalvin No. Gravis pads were as close to a console controller as you could get on a PC for a while. I remember the later USB pad pro, which was practically a clone of an original PS1 controller.

  • @lyrand6408
    @lyrand6408 Před 2 lety +6

    At the time only the SNES and Genesis ports mattered. I've known a grand total of zero friends in the 90s (be it last elementary school years, or high school years) who owned a 32X, let alone ever spoke of it. In the 'neighbourhood' the majority of us owned a Super Nintendo, a few had a Genesis (one of my best friends at the time had one, so I got to play a lot of Genesis games thanks to him, since I was a SNES owner).
    It's fun to go back to consoles that barely anyone had at the time and review games for them. But in the actual time period and its context, the 32X was a quickly passing 'fad' that had about as much of an impact as the Virtual Boy. I actually knew one person who did own a Virtual Boy, but not the 32X lol. Same thing happened with the Saturn. I did SEE a few Saturn (boxed) units in some local stores here and there (or at flea markets) but NO ONE owned that thing.
    Every time I see the statistics of the sales figures for those consoles (be it the 32X or Saturn, or stuff like the Atari Jaguar or the 3DO) I always wonder: "But WHERE were those owners back then?!". Even my local games rental stores didn't have 32X games for renting. I knew of ONE rental store with a few select Saturn games at some point. That was about it.
    That's also why the 'reputation' of ports of popular games were usually limited to the ports of the systems that were actually selling.
    BUT... with all this said, if at the time you'd happen to be one of "those rare owners" of the 32X, didn't have a SNES, and loved Mortal Kombat... then obviously that's the version you played and you most likely genuinely loved it at the time (next to the Arcade version, obviously). So growing up with those ports also helps perceive them as being "the best" if that's what you had.

    • @RetroGamesBoy78
      @RetroGamesBoy78 Před 2 lety +1

      Lyrand
      You can't lump the Saturn in with the 32X, 3DO, Jaguar. The Saturn still sold 10 million consoles, thats still a lot of hardware! Obviously with many of the big brand retailers turning their backs on Sega's new machine in the US with the whole surprise spring launch, it mean't it was a cert to fail in that territory, but it wasn't like those other machines you named that people just didn't want to buy those. If you wanted a Saturn in the states, you probably couldn't find one and just settled for a PS1. That wasn't true worldwide though, some of my friends bought Saturns after seeing my Saturn in action.

    • @lyrand6408
      @lyrand6408 Před 2 lety +1

      @@RetroGamesBoy78 I wasn't referring to the world wide situation / popularity. I was referring to how me and my 'local' group of friends from school (or including their own friends as well sometimes) simply nearly never saw any one of those 'other consoles' that, indeed, NOBODY wanted, or talked about.
      I'm literally not exaggerating when I say that - at least locally (within my city, or within the number of stores I used to go to) - about 90% of gaming-related stores (or even general ones like WalMarts, or Future Shops, or RadioShacks) never had any of that stuff. They had next to zero advertising or actual units of anything available unless that store really went out of their way to try and "make it sell" locally. It never worked.
      What we had here (Canada), was Nintendo and Sega stuff. You COULD occasionally find some remnants of Atari stuff (Atari 2600 and beyond), and just about as occasionally-speaking we also had some TurboGraphx-16 units every now and then in some stores. But when it comes to the Sega 32X, or the Mega CD addons, or something like the Nomad, or the Saturn, the 3DO and the Jaguar; you had to go on some Indiana Jones-esque adventure across the entire province to find those things (manner of speech, what I mean is it was actually VERY rare to find them just by entering some gaming store and asking for one and the clerk just going "sure, here's one").
      In other words what I'm saying is: The 32X's situation here was exactly like the Saturn or the 3DO, which is why I made the comparison, because they WERE in a comparable situation. Those systems really were the "ones that nobody wanted" OR the ones that "nobody could find" even if they tried.
      With all this said, of course I know the Saturn and the 32X sold units. Obviously. However, despite the 'stats' about the sales (world wide or not) it still doesn't help the case of having gone through the whole of the 90s without ever "feeling" that those systems DID actually sell. They did... sure, I just never saw the "proof" of that. Those systems never were the 'subject of talk' in town. I never heard of a store clerk saying something like "Nope sorry ran out of 32Xs, sold all of them, next shipment is in 2 weeks guys, sorry". Never, ever.

  • @x7heDeviLx
    @x7heDeviLx Před 10 měsíci

    I remember that time was going into 8th grade and mortal Kombat was super big with us. I still remember seeing part one and two for the first time and some place called flippers our local arcade

  • @WadeLife
    @WadeLife Před 2 lety

    I definitely miss this era of gaming fondly remember running to the playground first thing in the morning so we could talk about the best current games and cheats hint back in late 80's and 90's we didn't have social media... Great upload

  • @LifeAndDeath
    @LifeAndDeath Před 2 lety +5

    @Sega Lord X Awesome Review!! Mortal Kombat II is one of my most favorite MK games.

  • @ScarletDeath
    @ScarletDeath Před 2 lety +5

    MK II 32x is the best version of MKII hands down. I used to love playing this on my old CRT, I felt like I was at the arcade again.

  • @TheGamingCircle
    @TheGamingCircle Před 2 lety +1

    I remember buying Fatal Fury imported for the Super Famicom for £69.99 in 1995, so prices has always been expensive especially for imports:-))

  • @patrickrutherford5553
    @patrickrutherford5553 Před 2 lety +1

    I had this for 32x. I always felt like this was the best home console version

  • @Retro_Royal
    @Retro_Royal Před 2 lety +3

    More Details in the Background should be a easy mod job, who cares about prices of Mbits anymore? Sprites are a slightly taller order, though.

  • @flubberlane8437
    @flubberlane8437 Před 2 lety +3

    I’ve been waiting for this 😀

  • @DWIGHTMONEY
    @DWIGHTMONEY Před 2 lety +1

    Now this was very interesting to watch and listen to. Most folks wouldn't understand why each version wasnt the same nor why they were all so different and that emus not all the time help or enhance gameplay.

  • @IMDLEGEND
    @IMDLEGEND Před 2 lety +1

    I owned the SNES version, but I rented the 32x version. I remember thinking I was happy enough with the SNES version. I appreciated the voice samples in the 32x version, but the SNES announcer seemed to have a cool reverb effect missing in the 33x version.

  • @FirstAndFramerates
    @FirstAndFramerates Před 2 lety +3

    NBA Jam TE 32X soon?

  • @youuuuuuuuuuutube
    @youuuuuuuuuuutube Před 2 lety +6

    To its defense, the characters are much more detailed on Genesis/32X than SNES, thanks to the higher resolution. Look at 9:00, big difference, and if we play on emulator or on an LCD screen, it's obvious, but of course at the time on old CRT screens, the resolution didn't really matter.

    • @TalesBarros
      @TalesBarros Před 2 lety

      Characters can be more detailed, but they have MUCH less frames of animation, except for the standing still animation.

    • @maroon9273
      @maroon9273 Před 2 lety +1

      @@TalesBarros same issue mk1 had but the animations was choppy compare to the snes/sega cd. However the genesis (MK1)and even the sega cd (MK1) sprite framerates (moving/special moves/fatality dropped severely compare to the snes. Even look more grainy as well.

  • @hihosh1
    @hihosh1 Před 2 lety +1

    I actually only had a Genesis and knew that I wouldn't have the arcade version, so I wasn't disappointed... but I was blown away when I played the PC port, now that was amazing

  • @AngelASoto23
    @AngelASoto23 Před 2 lety +2

    Out of all the home ports, I still find myself playing the 32X version. SNES seems like it was the better option, but what ruined it for me is the muffled audio and just being very blurry. I guess it’s more of a preference, but what I do know for sure is that the 32X version didn’t have the AI cheap out crazy where it became unplayable even on the easiest mode

  • @KidInTheHall28
    @KidInTheHall28 Před 2 lety +3

    Bruh..."bog standard Genesis music"? You got some balls on you, son. The Genesis soundtrack was amazing of any port and second only to the arcade itself.

  • @dan_loup
    @dan_loup Před 2 lety +3

    The 32x wouln't be able to handle the backgrounds as well and keep the frame rate up.
    Sadly due only handling graphics as bitmaps, it has to do a LOT of work with the CPUs to draw the graphics, and fullscreen 60 FPS using the CPUs is kinda out of reach, specially with multiple backgrounds etc..

  • @EdwinTheGreat337
    @EdwinTheGreat337 Před 2 lety

    My dude SLX.
    One of the few games we had for SNES.
    SLX is not much older than me.
    I'd like to hear him talk about his gaming journey.

  • @PNNYWZEPRODUCTIONS
    @PNNYWZEPRODUCTIONS Před 2 lety +1

    Been a long time since I commented, but man this particular game brings back vivid memories for me. Can't describe the love I have for it. Definitely in my personal mount Rushmore of games, along with Mario 3 and world, Chrono trigger, resident evil 1-4 and several Zelda games.

  • @purplehaze2342
    @purplehaze2342 Před 2 lety +3

    I think the snes port beats the 32x

  • @LordelX
    @LordelX Před 2 lety +3

    The summer and fall of ‘94 was all about Mortal Kombat 2, Super Street Fighter II, Shadowrun, Alien 3 and Mech Warrior on the SNES. Then came Super Metroid, Final Fantasy VI (III) and Super Punch Out. The Genesis was such an inferior system by ‘94, not even Sonic 3 could save it.

    • @maroon9273
      @maroon9273 Před 2 lety

      Genesis dropped the ball by focusing on the 32x and giving probe a chance with mk2 instead of ditching them for sculptures. Probe and any amateur developers should never had rights to port any digitized graphic game to any home console except pc.

    • @RetroGamesBoy78
      @RetroGamesBoy78 Před 2 lety

      @@maroon9273 sorry, but you come across as knowing very little about the subject of video game development. What do you mean "Genesis dropped the ball"? No mention of Miday? And what the hell are you on about with the statement about digitized graphics?

    • @maroon9273
      @maroon9273 Před 2 lety

      @@RetroGamesBoy78 midway did not developed any port except the arcade. Only probe, developed the genesis and amiga ports of mortal kombat. Probe has failed to make a quality port except pc ports. Especially a systems that have color count and color pallete limitations like the amiga and genesis. Sega should've let sculptured develop mk2 since they know how to program digitized graphics unlike probe. Graphic wise for every single genesis games ie wrestlemania arcade and mk3.

    • @RetroGamesBoy78
      @RetroGamesBoy78 Před 2 lety

      @@maroon9273 yes, its down to Midway who port their games, not Sega.
      Probe did a great job with MK1 on Genesis and Amiga, and Mk2 could have been better, but the Genesis was an old console by then, expecting hardware thats 5 years old to emulate the latest arcade hardware costing thousands of pounds was never going to happen.

    • @maroon9273
      @maroon9273 Před 2 lety

      @@RetroGamesBoy78 personally probe did a horrble job visually and sound effect wise. Plus, missing stage soundtracks, horrible grainy lazy graphics and inaccurate presentation. At least the amiga version presenatation was good. if the genesis is a aging system, then why mk3 looks better than mk2 and mk1? Plus, compares better with other consoles than the two first games?

  • @joshoshea3194
    @joshoshea3194 Před 2 lety

    Great side by side comparisons in this video. I find that always helps.

  • @teddycaster248
    @teddycaster248 Před 2 lety +1

    Hello! I from Mordor (Russia), in golden times of 90’s here no be a Sega 32x, and nobody not heard about it platform. In Russia appeared only 8 bit Dendy (analog of NES from Taiwan), and 16 bit Sega MDII. SNES appeared later in September 1994, if I remember right (so many years passed since this). And I not talking about arcade, it appeared about year 1996, 1997, it be very rare. I saw MKII arcade in «ГУМ» it big old shop in centre of Moscow.
    Thank you very much for interesting video, I did’t know many things. I not expert in video game industry, but I not surprised what developers not make game versions for home consoles equal to Arcade. It simple, just think, you telling story how you and friends played in arcade MK2 a lot. Well, if on your Sega 32x you be able to play in 100% equal to arcade version, and your friend too - appears question “Hey, who now will be spending time and money on arcade machines, if kids have this game at home?” 🙂 So, I sure what it reason have right to live. It only my opinion, I not know much about it. P.S. Glory to Ukraine! 🇺🇦 Glory to Heroes!

  • @thecunninlynguist
    @thecunninlynguist Před 2 lety +6

    SNES MK2 remains the best of that generation's port.

    • @maroon9273
      @maroon9273 Před 2 lety +1

      All around better console port. Saturn and ps1 really disappointed me and could've been the best port sculpture or a more experienced probe development team did it. Hopefully a hacker will fix both ports one day.

    • @iamstartower
      @iamstartower Před 2 lety +3

      still prefer pc port.

  • @imakeituptoyou
    @imakeituptoyou Před 2 lety +1

    Mk2 on Super Nintendo was the one to have!
    ( I still have mine all these years later)😀

  • @HoT_ToucH
    @HoT_ToucH Před 2 lety

    I was a youngn when the 32X dropped since I was born in 85, So I remember getting the 32X for $19.99 at toys r us and I got this and the Star Wars arcade game, paid $20 for both as each was $9.99. Thanks for enlightening me towards the msrp, I only remember ever seeing virtua racing for that price, These reviews are so in-depth and so well made that you’ve made a complete fan out of me, keep up the good work man, 2 huge thumbs up with your content 🤘🏼🤘🏼

    • @HoT_ToucH
      @HoT_ToucH Před 2 lety

      Oh…And the game was a HUGE letdown to me. I remember thinking it was going to be so much better, Your review is spot on

  • @JimboJammy
    @JimboJammy Před 2 lety +4

    I still ponder those same questions... What could have been with this port! Even the original Genesis port should have been much better! Although both do play nicely and play closer to the arcade version than the snes.

  • @scottlinux
    @scottlinux Před 2 lety +10

    I preferred the Genesis Mortal Kombat II over the SNES version, even with more poorer graphics. The game play seemed more responsive and more enjoyable to me for some reason, but that is just my own opinion :)

    • @SRC267
      @SRC267 Před 2 lety +2

      Someone has made a hack of the arcade version to run on the genesis via emulation

    • @cmdrdredd
      @cmdrdredd Před 2 lety

      Haha

    • @maroon9273
      @maroon9273 Před 2 lety

      Even with the better gameplay, I hated the lazy and ugly graphics, audio and presentation. It is a lazy eyesore/sound effect-sore port like mk1

    • @gcscr
      @gcscr Před 2 lety

      Definitely the Genesis/32x gameplay has been better than SNES since MK1.

    • @matrixman7706
      @matrixman7706 Před 2 lety +1

      The SNES version played quite good, and even John Tobias had no issues with gameplay on the system.

  • @jasonx1580
    @jasonx1580 Před 2 lety

    "Mushroom-shaped Accelerator" was my nickname in high school...

  • @michaels9595
    @michaels9595 Před 2 lety

    you really bring the nostalgia to each of these videos. nostalgia lord x!

  • @victorlgcarvalho
    @victorlgcarvalho Před 2 lety +3

    I always prefered the Genesis music on MK for both MK 1 and 2. Clear sound, nice percussion effects.

  • @foojae
    @foojae Před 2 lety +5

    The Sega Genesis MK2 was so damn awful compared to the SNES. I was blown away when I saw how close to arcade the SNES was and regretted getting a Genesis. That and when I saw Killer Instinct lol.

    • @stevesteve0521
      @stevesteve0521 Před 2 lety +2

      Agreed, from a graphically and sound standpoint the genesis looked horrible compared to the snes although it still played very good. I personally believe the snes port was the best home port even over the 32X because the snes port still had better color and had an exclusive 4 on 4 vs endurance mode. The Saturn and ps1 ports looked like the arcade but everything else about those ports were mediocre from bad load times but before the game starts and during gameplay, removed sound effects, music that didn’t fit the stage and dumb stuff like all projectiles having to load for a second when you first use them during a game or kitanas fan lift pushing the opponent way too back where you can’t capitalize on an attack the way you should

    • @Peeps7468
      @Peeps7468 Před 2 lety +1

      I loved Killer Instinct!!

  • @kj2956
    @kj2956 Před 2 lety +1

    When MK4 hit arcades is when arcades dwindled. MKII was the peak for arcades.

  • @Larry
    @Larry Před 2 lety

    Does the 32X version have Fergalities still?

  • @PsychomachineryEBM
    @PsychomachineryEBM Před 2 lety +3

    Sorry but the SNES got the best port

  • @stephenchase2537
    @stephenchase2537 Před 2 lety +5

    This is the worst port of Mortal Kombat 2!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

    • @tarasybnios5356
      @tarasybnios5356 Před 2 lety +1

      This is what? haha what are you people smoking? This is the best MK2 port by far! Not even the next generation of consoles got an Arcade perfect edition.

    • @miltonbates6425
      @miltonbates6425 Před 2 lety +1

      Ha! You trollin son

    • @cmdrdredd
      @cmdrdredd Před 2 lety +3

      @@tarasybnios5356 could argue it's the worst because it is the laziest of the bunch. Just slap new effects on the genesis version instead of building it up properly

    • @maroon9273
      @maroon9273 Před 2 lety +2

      I'll say the amiga and genesis ports is even worst than the 32x.

    • @tarasybnios5356
      @tarasybnios5356 Před 2 lety +1

      @@cmdrdredd Yes I agree the 32X version had more potential but that doesn't make it in anyway the worst! A lazy port yes but still it is superior from the other 16 bit versions!

  • @chkooper3985
    @chkooper3985 Před 2 lety

    Hey Sega lord. I talked to at the start of the year about how u helped me with loss of my dogs. And you where rite about it getting better with time and as long as you make videos on CZcams u will have always have have me a big fan.

  • @timvanbaelen9797
    @timvanbaelen9797 Před 2 lety

    Thanks Dad for buying the SNES version for me, surprising me with it one Sunday morning.

  • @kempet
    @kempet Před 2 lety +1

    The best thing about the 32X version is the Wasteland stage - they somehow made the color tone a lot better, even outdoing the arcade version of the Wasteland...

  • @baronhausenpheffer
    @baronhausenpheffer Před 2 lety +1

    Fantastic review, and one I feel is very fair. I fall in that latter group you mentioned who DIDN'T pay $70 back in the mid-90s and who has a very positive opinion of this game as a result. (That's also true of my experience of the 32X generally -- I got it on clearance for a song and had a great time with it playing games that looked better than anything my Genesis could have natively run while I saved up for a Saturn.) Put simply, this game is the best home port we had of MKII until the "MK Arcade Kollection" compliation on PS3 many years later, and I think it deserves major kudos for that. I understand younger SLX's disappointment that it wasn't 100% arcade perfect, but the amount of ground-up reprogramming that would have required on a console that most developers seemed to understand Sega wasn't terribly committed to probably would have made it a financial loss. Heck, it may have STILL been a financial loss even as actual events unfolded. However, I do fault Acclaim for scalping gamers on that basis. This should have been a more standard $40-50, given that the upgrade wasn't a night-and-day difference from the Genesis port. Getting back to the subjective level, I truly love this game, and it makes me wish the 32X had a chance to tackle "Super Street Fighter II Turbo" like the 3DO did before it closed shop.

  • @psfanboy79
    @psfanboy79 Před rokem

    The added color pallets of the 32x made such a huge difference

  • @jamesandalotofgames9211
    @jamesandalotofgames9211 Před 2 lety +1

    I never played it until recently on emulation. This version I mean. I had the snes version in the 90s . But comparing it to all the home releases it’s my favorite now. Home versions from the 90s that is

  • @dwaynestjohn5324
    @dwaynestjohn5324 Před 2 lety

    Great video I would love to see a video about mk3 or mk trilogy and the comparisons of all of the console versions.

  • @zombiekilldemon
    @zombiekilldemon Před 2 lety +1

    There is the Mortal Kombat II 32X ultimate edition. It's a fan mod that is in my opinion is just required. Like Mortal Kombat 1 for the Genesis has the Arcade edition mod.

  • @krisfrederick5001
    @krisfrederick5001 Před 2 lety

    We had a bowling alley with an arcade down the street we could literally ride our bikes to, I remember this coming out vividly. I also remember begging for a 32X but never got one, the next year I ended up with a Playstation. Good call Mom 👍🏼

  • @Haddley333
    @Haddley333 Před 4 měsíci

    8:10 I played the SNES version a lot and always thought that was some sort of weird symbol in the middle of the screen there on the background. Prob from playing it too much but I can't unsee it even all these years later.

  • @britneyspearsvillarosa

    The Toasty guy is Dan Fordan the sound dev for the first MK games